8. Joe Smith (1995, #1, Golden State) - Now, some of you may be surprised that I'm picking Joe this high, and Joe has had a good NBA career, but that's not why I'm doing this. Golden State has not made the playoffs for the past eleven seasons, and this is one of the main reasons why. They have not had success in picking in drafts, and whoever is worth keeping is not kept. Now, Joe Smith has averaged 14 points and 7 rebounds in his NBA career, numbers that not everyone gets today. However, when Joe was picked #1 out of Maryland eight years ago, he was believed to be the next great player in the NBA. However, look at the people chosen, in order, after him: Antonio McDyess; Jerry Stackhouse; Rasheed Wallace; Kevin Garnett. Those four players have been/are NBA all-stars, while Joe's best season was a 19 ppg, 8 rpg effort in 1996-1997. He's a good 6th man and a good rebounder, but unfortunately Joe will be remembered for two things in the NBA: 1.) his draft status and 2.) the whole scandal involving Minnesota losing all their draft picks for the next millennium for him.
7. Sharone Wright (1994, #6, Philadelphia) - Sharone Wright was believed to be the next Charles Barkley in Philadelphia, a player of similar stature that rebounded and hustled for his team like a madman. However, Wright was anything but a madman, as he played four lackluster NBA seasons, two with Philly and two with the expansion Toronto Raptors. Wright averaged nearly 10 ppg and 5 rpg in his career, but he was gone after 1997 and never seen since. There have been rumors that him and Oliver Miller went on a National Buffet Tour, but I cannot confirm that rumor.
6. Frederic Weis (1999, #15, New York) - Oh my lord, please don't get me started. Forget it, I'm already going. Interim GM Ed Tapscott, who had just taken over in New York, was looking for the next big man in the NBA. Ron Artest, a player that all New Yorkers dreamed would one day be a Knick, was still on the board when the Knicks selected #15 in the draft. The Knicks had just made the NBA Finals with a mediocre #8 seed team, and with the decent draft pick they had received, they were looking for the player that would keep them in contention. Artest, after a solid career at St. John's, was still on the board at #15, where the Knicks had not expected him to be sitting around. As David Stern made the announcement, ''with the 15th pick in the 1999 NBA Draft, the New York Knicks select, Frederic Weis, out of France.'' With all the boos overheard in the Garden, you would've thought the New York Rangers were playing. Needless to say, Frederic Weis never played a game in the NBA, while Ron Artest is now a near all-star with the Indiana Pacers. Most Knick fans now wonder what could've been, while Tony Parker recently made the statement that Weis isn't even good enough to play in the NBA. Meanwhile, the Knicks are now a lottery team, a far cry from the NBA Finals team from 4 years ago.
5. Kwame Brown (2001, #1, Washington) - Perhaps the only player that'll be remembered from Michael Jordan's tenure as Wizards General Manager, Kwame Brown was groomed to become the next ''straight outta high school'' player to become an NBA star. However, something went wrong around the time that Jordan decided to be Superwizard and play again. Jordan pushed Brown to the limit, a limit that the young 18-year-old from Glynn Academy in Virginia didn't even want to look towards. Kwame had an incredibly horrible rookie season for a #1 pick, perhaps the worst since Larue Martin in the '72-'73 campaign. Brown showed signs of improvement on Opening Night 2002 against the Raptors with a near double-double, but he's gone back to the same ways of his rookie season. Perhaps with Jordan gone now, Brown could become a reliable 15/10 guy in the NBA without any problem, but for now, he has to be one of the worst #1 picks of all-time, along the lines of, you guessed it, Larue Martin. Prove me wrong Kwame, prove me wrong.
4. Eric Montross (1994, #9, Boston) - Maybe Boston was expecting Robert Parish? Eric Montross had a stellar career at North Carolina, as he played with such players as Rasheed Wallace and Jerry Stackhouse. Montross was selected by Boston, a team desperately looking for an answer after the death of Reggie Lewis and the death of their franchise as a whole after the glory of the 1980s. Montross was believed to be the answer in the middle for the Celtics, but he hasn't been the answer for any team in his 9 years in the NBA. He's played for 4 NBA teams, averaging 4.5 ppg and 4.6 ppg during his career. He now sits on the bench in Toronto, wondering what went wrong with a career that started at a prestigious university and has ended on Toronto's bench.
3. Bobby Hurley (1993, #7, Sacramento) - Bobby Hurley was a great point-guard, a player that led Duke to two national titles during the early 1990's. Hurley was known as a good kid that had an incredible basketball IQ and a good feel for the game. However, something went wrong when he landed in Sacramento, a team that achieved no success in its first 8 seasons in the NBA. Hurley was being placed on a team with such talented players as Mitch Richmond, Wayman Tisdale, Lionel Simmons, and Spud Webb, and with Hurley at the helm, this team seemed destined for a winning season. However, Hurley was not the answer in Sacramento, as he averaged 7 points and 6 assists in his rookie season but never was the same afterwards. Hurley spent four years in Sacramento, averaging 4 ppg and 3 apg, before a car accident nearly killed him prior to the 1997 season and ended his lackluster NBA career. Hurley had a horrible NBA career and an even worse end to his career, showing that some players just can never catch a break and establish themselves in the NBA.
2. Robert Traylor (1998, #6, Milwaukee) - I will admit to you all, I was a huge Robert Traylor fan when he was at Michigan. ''The Tractor'' had enough power in his 6'7'', 280-pound frame that he was able to bully his way right to the basket, no matter who was in front of him. After a stellar career with the Wolverines in which he just overpowered most of his opponents, Traylor seemed destined to go right into the NBA and achieve the same success against the bigger bodies of the NBA. Traylor was originally selected by the Dallas Mavericks, a team that had won 36 games once in 8 seasons, which must've pleased Dallas fans. However, Don Nelson, the cuckoo bastard that he is, decided to trade Traylor to Milwaukee in exchange for a young, lanky forward named Dirk Nowitzki. Who got the better of that deal, you ask? Traylor has averaged 4.7 ppg and 3.5 rpg in his five seasons in the NBA, as he has been on 3 different teams. Nowitzki is now a perennial all-star two years running and an over 20-ppg scorer. Perhaps one of the most lopsided trades in NBA history, Traylor can now be seen on New Orleans' bench, drinking all the team's Gatorade. Nowitzki can be seen in the Western Conference Finals, scoring at will.
1. Shawn Bradley (1993, #2, Philadelphia) - When I was doing this list, I was looking for a clearcut #1 choice for the biggest NBA bust of the past decade. When I couldn't find one, I was thinking about players that seemed surefire and able to contribute automatically but didn't pan out the way the team imagined. Shawn Bradley was exactly the player I was looking for. After seeing what Manute Bol can do defensively with his size, Bradley was selected straight out of Brigham Young University. His college career showed that Bradley had the mixture of size and scoring ability needed to become an all-around force in the NBA, so someone foolishly took a shot on him. That someone was the Philadelphia 76ers, a team looking to rid themselves of their old, run-of-the-mill players and establish a system of talented young players. When Charles Barkley left for Phoenix during that offseason, Philly was looking for an answer, and that answer was Bradley. They believed his size was unheralded, and he would immediately come in as an uncontrollable force. Since Philly's best player in Bradley's rookie year was Clarence Weatherspoon, Bradley averaged 10 ppg and 6 rpg, showing his incredible potential. Bradley spent another year in Philly before the team switched to a smaller team with the likes of Jeff Malone and Jerry Stackhouse. Bradley was traded to the New Jersey Nets, where he averaged 12/8 for two decent but losing seasons. Bradley has now spent six lackluster seasons with the Dallas Mavericks, where he has been unable to become the star people once expected him to become. Bradley's career numbers: 9.5 ppg, 7.2 rpg, 3 bpg. Not bad numbers for an all-out bust, but considering that Bradley has basically become a joke in the NBA, a player that all NBAers attempt to posterize on a night-in, night-out basis, it is a sad occurrence that this guy was once considered a future star.
HONORABLE MENTIONS:
Olivier Saint-Jean (1997, #11, Sacramento, aka Tariq Abdul-Wahad)
Donyell Marshall (1994, #4, Minnesota)
Cherokee Parks (1995, #12, Minnesota)
Jerome Moiso (2000, #11, Boston)
Dontae Jones (1996, #21, New York)
Khalid Reeves (1994, #12, Miami)
Terry Dehere (1993, #13, LA Clippers)
Scott Haskin (1993, #14, Indiana)
DeSagana Diop (2001, #8, Cleveland)
Todd Fuller (1996, #11, Golden State)
Chris Anstey (1997, #18, Portland)